Features
Of Gandhi and Ahimsa
(Excerpted from Men and Memories by JR Jayewardene)
Ahimsa (Non-violence) is one of the cardinal principles of my life. I am a great admirer of Mahatma Gandhi’s life and work. Ahimsa was a cardinal principle of his life too. I met him on several occasions and studied his writings carefully. In November 1989, I delivered a lecture in London on Ahimsa to a meeting of the Joint Commonwealth Societies. On October 2, 1991, 1 spoke about Gandhi and Ahimsa, at a commemoration meeting bell in Colombo on Gandhi’s birth anniversary. But here, I would like to present what I said about Gandhi first, and then what I said about Ahimsa.
October 2, 1991
It was indeed very gracious on the part of the India-Sri Lanka Society to have invited me to speak a few words on this occasion, commemorating the birthday of Mahatma Gandhi. It may be because very few in Sri Lanka, and even very few among the politician of India are alive, who lived
in the era in which Mahatma Gandhi played such an important role in Indian and World History.
It is possible for me to speak of some events that others may now know of or may not even have heard of. I am happy to have this opportunity of doing so.
It has already been mentioned that Mahatma Gandhi, or Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, was born on October 2, 1869. He was born in Porbandar, a village to the North-West of Bombay, and was the fourth child of his father’s fourth marriage! He (Gandhi) married Kasturba Bai at the age of 14. She was younger. The marriage lasted for 62 years.
At the age of 19, he went from India to London to study law. He was there for a few years and came back to India as a full-fledged lawyer in 1891. The story of his life in London is stated in his biography and it is not necessary to refer to it now.
When he was practicing in Bombay, he received an invitation from South Africa in 1893 to appear in a case and he decided to go to South Africa for a short time. When he was there, he found the life of a Black man different from what he had experienced in India. The White people in India treated the natives badly but in South Africa it was much worse.
He appeared in Court with a turban and the-judge said, “Take the turban off.” He refused to do so. The judge said, “You cannot appear in this Court.” He had to leave the Court.
On another occasion, he was traveling by train. He bought a First Class ticket and boarded the train. After some time, some White people got in and said, “Get out of this compartment.” He replied that he had bought a First Class ticket. The White man used some words which I cannot repeat to this audience. Gandhi refused to get out. At the next station, they got the police and Gandhi was ejected. He was left on the station platform for a whole night, freezing in the cold.
He was once traveling in what was the then called a bus. It was a horse-carriage vehicle. He was asked to climb up and sit with the driver because a White man was traveling inside the carriage. He refused. He was assaulted and pulled out. He found life in South Africa different, and saw how the Black people were treated there. Gandhi thought that he should try and help them because most of them were uneducated and a large number were also indentured labour brought from India.
After some years, he decided to go back to India. On the day in 1894 he was to go back, he was given a farewell lunch. He heard that a law had been passed which prohibited Indians registering marriages, because Indians were marrying White people and this was the best way to prevent such marriages. All Indian marriages became illegal and the children became illegitimate. Various other laws were also being passed; some which prevented Indians from registering as voters. Gandhi was persuaded to stay. He promised to stay for another year but at the end he stayed for 20 years, up to the end of the nineteenth century, and the first decade of the twentieth century up to 1914.
During his stay in South Africa, he began to think of the social and political life led by the Black people in South Africa and, in his own country, India. He was wondering how to educate them to free themselves. He published a small paper, and organized a competition to ask the people their views to suggest a name for the non-violent way he had thought of to free the people from bondage or apartheid, as it was called.
The prize was ultimately won by his own son for the word “Satyagraha”. ‘Satya’ means truth and ‘Graha’ means holding, that is, “holding to the truth”. It is not a new word. “Satya Kriya” is a word used in the Buddhist vocabulary. When Gautama the Buddha was faced with certain difficulties, he had performed “Satya Kriya”-‘Truthful Action’. By the power of his mental ability, which he called “Satya Kriya”, he was able to overcome those difficulties. When you attend a Buddhist wedding ceremony, you hear “Jayamangala Gathas”–“Happy Happy Wedding Verses”, being sung. They describe the “Satya Kriyas” performed by Gautama the Buddha.
Our own king, Siri Sangabo, had performed a `Satya Kriya’ when there was no rain. He had sat in front of the Ruwanweli Dagoba and decided not to get up till there was rain. His `Satya Kriya’ brought rain. Later, when he abdicated and gave up his throne and went into the jungles at Attanagalla, his brother who succeeded him feared that he might come back as he was very popular. He announced a reward for anyone bringing the head of his brother.
People started bringing heads to the King. A beggar came to Attangalla and met Siri Sangabo who was a mendicant there and related the story. He performed a `Satya Kriya’ and gave his head to the beggar. The beggar took it to Anuradhapura and gave it to the King and got the reward, for people who were bringing false heads could not do so after that.
Gandhi, greatly influenced by the Russian writer Tolstoy, on non-violence, started the `Satya Graha’ movement in South Africa and it was a great success. All the Indians there, as well as others, flocked to him. He was able to dispel the fear of the people. When he said, “Break the law”, they broke the law. They did not fear being arrested and going to jail. This went on and the whole tempo of South African politics changed and it was due to Gandhi’s leadership.
People in India began to invite him, “Why don’t you come to India? We are beginning our freedom movement. You have been successful in South Africa, why don’t you come back. We do not know what to do. We are making speeches, we are sending memoranda. Why don’t you come back and teach us how to regain freedom?”
In 1914 he decided to come back. Unfortunately, the First World War was going on at that time. He said, “We will have to help the British.” Even at that time the Germans were not very popular. He said, “We do not want the German regime to come here.” He went round the country but did nothing to hurt or hinder the British movement.
There were occasions when he helped the people to perform `Satyagraha’. One was when there was an agitation in Champaran in Bihar in 1917, where the people used to grow indigo by agreement with the British planters. They grew the indigo, spent all the money, but they had to share the crop and the profit. Three-fourths of the crop went to the British planter, and one-fourth to the man who grew the crop.
There was great distress and Rajendra Prasad who was one of the Indians who lived there, said, “We must resist this,” but did not know how. Gandhi came in and started the first `Satyagraha’ movement in India. It was a great success. The British Government of the area decided to acquire all lands of the ‘Satyagrahis’. They acquired all their buildings, furniture and other assets. Ultimately, they were sent to jail. The peasants did not change. The British said they had had enough of it, and “came to terms; to planters and the peasants.”
(To be continued next week)
Features
Mannar’s silent skies: Migratory Flamingos fall victim to power lines amid Wind Farm dispute
By Ifham Nizam
A fresh wave of concern has gripped conservationists following the reported deaths of migratory flamingos within the Vankalai Sanctuary—a globally recognised bird habitat—raising urgent questions about the ecological cost of large-scale renewable energy projects in the region.
The incident comes at a time when a fundamental rights petition, challenging the proposed wind power project, linked to India’s Adani Group, remains under examination before the Supreme Court, with environmental groups warning that the very risks they highlighted are now materialising.
At least two flamingos—believed to be part of the iconic migratory flocks that travel thousands of kilometres to reach Sri Lanka—were found dead after entanglement with high-tension transmission lines running across the sanctuary. Another bird was reportedly struggling for survival.
Professor Sampath Seneviratne, a leading ornithologist, expressed deep concern over the development, noting that such incidents are not isolated but indicative of a broader and predictable threat.
“These migratory birds depend on specific flyways that have remained unchanged for centuries. When high-risk infrastructure, like poorly planned power lines, intersect these routes, collisions become inevitable,” he said. “What we are witnessing now could be just the beginning if proper mitigation measures are not urgently implemented.”
Environmentalists argue that the Mannar region—particularly the Vankalai wetland complex—is one of the most critical stopover sites in South Asia for migratory waterbirds, including flamingos, pelicans, and various species of waders. The sanctuary’s ecological value has also supported a niche with growing eco-tourism sector, drawing birdwatchers from around the world.
Executive Director of the Centre for Environmental Justice, Dilena Pathragoda, said the incident underscores the urgency of judicial intervention and stricter environmental oversight.
“This tragedy is a direct consequence of ignoring scientifically established environmental safeguards. We have already raised these concerns before court, particularly regarding the location of transmission infrastructure within sensitive bird habitats,” Pathragoda said.
“Renewable energy cannot be pursued in isolation from ecological responsibility. If due process and proper environmental impact assessments are bypassed or diluted, then such losses are inevitable.”
Conservation groups have long cautioned that the installation of wind turbines and associated grid infrastructure—especially overhead transmission lines—within or near sensitive habitats could transform these landscapes into lethal zones for avifauna.
An environmental activist involved in the ongoing legal challenge said the latest deaths validate earlier warnings.
“This is exactly what we feared. Development is necessary, but not at the cost of biodiversity. When projects of this scale proceed without adequate ecological assessments and safeguards, the consequences are irreversible,” the activist stressed.
The debate has once again brought into focus the delicate balance between renewable energy expansion and biodiversity conservation. While wind energy is widely promoted as a clean alternative to fossil fuels, experts caution that “green” does not automatically mean “harmless.”
Professor Seneviratne emphasised that solutions do exist, including rerouting transmission lines, installing bird diverters, and conducting comprehensive migratory pathway studies prior to project approval.
“Globally, there are well-established mitigation strategies. The issue here is not the absence of knowledge, but the failure to apply it effectively,” he noted.
The timing of the incident is particularly worrying. Migratory flamingos typically remain in Sri Lanka until late April or May before embarking on their return journeys. Conservationists warn that if hazards remain unaddressed, larger flocks could face similar risks in the coming weeks.
Beyond ecological implications, experts also highlight potential economic fallout. Wildlife tourism—especially birdwatching—contributes significantly to local livelihoods in Mannar.
Repeated reports of bird deaths could deter eco-conscious travellers and damage the region’s reputation as a safe haven for migratory species.
Environmentalists are now calling for immediate intervention by authorities, including a temporary halt to high-risk operations in sensitive zones, pending a thorough environmental review.
They stress that protecting animal movement corridors—whether elephant migration routes or avian flyways—is a fundamental pillar of modern conservation.
As the controversy unfolds, one question looms large: can Sri Lanka pursue sustainable energy without sacrificing the very natural heritage that defines it?
Pathragoda added that for now, the sight of fallen flamingos in Mannar stands as a stark reminder that development, if not carefully planned, can carry a heavy and irreversible cost.
Features
‘Weaponizing’ religion in the pursuit of power
A picture of US President Donald Trump apparently being prayed for by supporters, appearing in sections of the international media, said it all loud and clear. That is, religion is being flagrantly leveraged or prostituted by politicians single-mindedly bent on furthering their power aspirations.
Although in the case of the US President the trend took on may be an exceptionally graphic or dramatic form, the ‘weaponizing’ of religion is nothing particularly new, nor is it confined to only religiously conservative sections of the West. For example, in South Asia it is an integral part of politics. The ‘South Asian Eight’ are notorious for it and it could be unreservedly stated that in Sri Lanka, the latter’s ethnic conflict would be more amenable to resolution if religion was not made a potent weapon by ambitious politicians of particularly the country’s South.
The more enlightened sections of Christian believers in the US may not have been able to contain their consternation at the sight of the US President apparently being ‘blessed’ by pastors claiming adherence to Christianity. Any human is entitled to be blessed but not if he is leading his country to war without exhausting all the options at his disposal to end the relevant conflict by peaceful means.
More compounded would be his problem if his directives lead to the death of civilians in the hundreds. In the latter case he is stringently accountable for the spilling of civilian blood, that is, the committing of war crimes.
However, the US along with Israel did just that in the recent bombings of Iran, for instance. The majority of the lives lost were those of civilians. If the US President is endowed with a Christian conscience he would have paused to consider that he is guilty of ordering the taking of the life of another human which is forbidden in the teachings of Jesus Christ.
Moreover, the ‘pastors’ praying over the US President should have thought on the above lines as well. May be they were in an effort to curry the President’s favour which is as blame-worthy as legitimizing in some form the taking of civilian lives. Apparently, the realisation is not dawning on all Christian conservatives of the US that some of these ‘pastors’ could very well be the proverbial false prophets and the latter are almost everywhere, even in far distant Sri Lanka.
However, the political reality ‘on the ground’ is that the Christian Right is a stable support base of the Republican Right in the US. Considering this it should not come as a surprise to the seasoned political watcher if the Christian Right, read Christian fundamentalists, are hand-in-glove, so to speak, with President Trump. But it is a scathing indictment on these rightist sections that they are all for perpetrating war and destruction and not for the fostering of peace and reconciliation. Ideally, they should have impressed on their President the dire need to make peace.
That said, political commentators should consider it incumbent on themselves to point out that religion is being ‘weaponized’ in Iran as well. Theocratic rule in Iran has been essentially all about perpetuating the power of the clerical class. The reasons that led to the Islamic Revolution in Iran are complex and the indiscreet Westernization of Iran under the Shah dynasty is one of these but one would have expected Iran to develop from then on into a multi-party, pluralistic democratic state where people would be enjoying their fundamental rights, as enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, for example.
Moreover, Iran should have taken it upon itself to be a champion of world peace, in keeping with its Islamic credentials. But some past regimes in Iran had vowed to virtually bomb Israel out of existence and such regional policy trajectories could only bring perpetual conflict and war. Considering the current state of the Middle East it could be said that the unfettered playing out of these animosities is leading the region and the world to ‘reap the whirlwind’, having recklessly ‘sowed the wind’.
However, religious fundamentalism-inspired conflict and war has spread well beyond the Middle East into almost every region since 1979, the year of the Islamic Revolution in Iran. So much so, knowledgeable opinion now points out that religious identity has come to replace nationalism as a principal shaper of international politics or “geopolitics”, as quite a few sections misleadingly and incorrectly term it.
Elaborating on the decisive influence of religious identity, the well known and far traveled Western journalist Patrick Cockburn says in his authoritative and comprehensive book titled, ‘The Age of Jihad – Islamic State and the Great War for the Middle East’ at page 428 in connection with the war in Chechnya ; ‘If nationalism was not entirely dead, it no longer provided the ideological glue necessary to hold together and motivate people who were fighting a war. Unlike the Islamic faith, it was no longer a belief or a badge of identity for which people would fight very hard.’ (The book in reference was published by VERSO, London and New York).
In his wide coverage of Jihadist Wars the world over Cockburn goes on to state that today a call from a cleric could motivate his followers to lay down no less than their lives for a cause championed by the former. The 9/11 catastrophe alone should convince the observer that this is indeed true.
However, as often pointed out in this column, there is no alternative but to foster peace and reconciliation if a world free of bloodshed and strife is what is being sought. Fortunately we are not short of illustrious persons from the East and West who have shone a light on how best to get to a degree of peace. Besides Mahatma Gandhi of India, who was the subject of this column last week, we have former President of Iran Mohammad Khatami, who made a case for a ‘Dialogue of Civilizations’ rather than a ‘Clash of Civilizations’.
The time is more than ripe to take a leaf from these illustrious personalities, for, the current state of war in the Middle East has raised the possibility of a war that could transcend regional boundaries. The antagonists are obliged to exhaust all the peaceful options with the assistance of the UN system. Besides, war cannot ever have the blessings of the sane.
Features
Venerable Rahula Thera’s 35-year green mission and national Namal Uyana
It was 35 years ago, on March 28, 1991, that Venerable Rahula Thera, then a young monk, embarked on a journey to the Na forest in Ulpathagama, Palagama, in the Anuradhapura District. Today, three and a half decades later, this mission stands as living proof of the enduring bond between Buddhist philosophy and the natural world.
Marking the 35th year of this green mission, Rahula Thera’s relentless dedication has transformed the National Namal Uyana into an environmental landmark admired not only across Sri Lanka but around the globe, as well.
When studying the life of Venerable Rahula Thera, one cannot ignore the profound connection between Buddhism and the environment. Buddhism is a philosophy deeply attuned to nature. The historical use of the sacred “Na Ruka” by all four Buddhas: Mangala Buddha, Sumana Buddha, Revata Buddha, and Sobhita Buddha — for enlightenment —demonstrates that from time immemorial, Buddhism has maintained a sacred bond with the Na tree. From the birth of Siddhartha to his enlightenment, the propagation of the Dharma, and even the great Parinirvana, all of these milestones unfolded in verdant, living landscapes.
Venerable Rahula Thera did not embark on the Namal Uyana mission seeking government support or personal gain. His commitment sprang from a deep devotion to the Buddha’s teachings on grove cultivation. A grove cultivator is one who spreads compassion for nature. As the Vanaropa Sutta teaches:
Venerable Rahula Thera reclaimed Namal Uyana which was then under the control of timber smugglers and treasure hunters. The term “Wanawasi” does not merely mean living in a forest; it signifies finding rest and enlightenment through nature, free from the destructive roots of greed, sin, and delusion.
Another defining aspect of Venerable Rahula Thera’s 35-year mission is the purification of the human mind. He has consistently taught the thousands who visit Namal Uyana that a person who loves a tree will never harm another human being. As the Dhamma proclaims:
It is important to remember that Venerable Rahula Thera devoted his life, without fear, speaking the truth and taking necessary action, tirelessly advancing the national mission he began. From 1991 to the present, he has worked with every government elected by the people, maintaining impartiality and independence from political ideology. Yet, he never hesitated to raise his voice fearlessly against any individual, of any rank or party, who committed wrongdoing.
Religious and Social Mission
The National Namal Uyana is not merely a forest; it is a magnificent heritage site, dating back to ancient times. Scattered across the landscape are boundary walls, the remains of ancient monastery complexes, and stone carvings believed to date back to the reign of King Devanampiyatissa. In earlier centuries, this sacred land had served as a meditation sanctuary for hundreds of monks. The name “National Namal Uyana,” by which this ecological and archaeological treasure is known today, was introduced by Venerable Rahula Thera in 1991. The government’s later recognition of the site as the National Namal Uyana stands as a significant achievement for both religion and national heritage.
Venerable Rahula Thera is a monk who has lived a life of renunciation. A striking example of this is his decision not to assume the position of Chief Incumbent of the National Namal Uyana Viharaya, instead entrusting the temple to the Ramanna Nikaya and its trustees. In doing so, he set a precedent for the contemporary Sangha. The Thera himself stated that he was merely the trustee of Namal Uyana, not its owner.
Legacy and Continuing Inspiration
The 35th anniversary of Venerable Wanawasi Rahula Thera’s arrival at Namal Uyana is not merely the commemoration of a period of time; it is a message of nature to future generations. Through his work, the Thera revived the ancient Hela tradition of loving trees and venerating the environment as something sacred. This religious and environmental mission remains unforgettable.
The revival experienced by Namal Uyana, after the arrival of Venerable Wanawasi Rahula Thera, is beyond simple description. Some of the major accomplishments achieved under his leadership include:
* Securing and protecting the largest Rose Quartz (Rosa Thirivana) reserve in South Asia.
* Restoring the Na forest spread across hundreds of acres, providing shelter to numerous rare plants and animal species.
* Transforming the area into a living centre for environmental education, offering practical learning experiences for thousands of schoolchildren and university students.
* Drawing the attention of world leaders and international environmentalists to Sri Lanka’s unique environmental heritage.
In recognition of his immense contribution to environmental conservation, Venerable Rahula Thera was honoured with the Presidential Environment Award and the Green Award in 2004—a significant moment in his life. Yet the Thera himself has always remained devoted to the work rather than the recognition it brings, making such appreciation even more meaningful.
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